
Entrance to the Ambrosian Library.
The 'Biblioteca Ambrosiana' is a historical
library in
Milan, also housing the the 'Pinacoteca Ambrosiana' art gallery. Named after
Ambrose, the patron saint of Milan, it was founded by Cardinal
Federico Borromeo (
1564-
1631), whose agents scoured Western Europe and even
Greece and
Syria for books and manuscripts. Some major acquisitions of complete libraries were the manuscripts of the Benedictine monastery of
Bobbio (1606) and the library of the Paduan
Vincenzo Pinelli, whose more than 800 manuscripts filled 70 cases when they were sent to Milan and included the famous illuminated ''
Iliad'', the ''Ilia Picta''.
History
During Cardinal Borromeo's sojourns in Rome, 1585–95 and 1597–1601, he envisioned developing this library in Milan as one open to scholars and that would serve as a bulwark of Catholic scholarship against the treatises issuing from Protestant presses. To house the cardinal's 15,000 manuscripts and twice that many printed books, Construction began in
1603 under designs and direction of
Lelio Buzzi and
Francesco Maria Richini. When its first reading room, the ''Sala Fredericiana'', opened to the public,
December 8,
1609, it was, after the
Bodleian Library in Oxford, the second public library in Europe. One innovation was that its books were housed in cases ranged along the walls, rather than chained to reading tables, a practice seen still today in the
Laurentian Library of
Florence. A
printing press was attached to the library, and a school for instruction in the classical languages.
Constant acquisitions, soon augmented by bequests, required enlargement of the space. Borromeo intended an
academy (which opened in 1625) and a collection of pictures, for which a new building was initiated in 1611–18 to house the Cardinal's paintings and drawings, the nucleus of the Pinacoteca.
Cardinal Borromeo gave his collection of paintings and drawings to the library too. Shortly after the cardinal's death his library acquired twelve manuscripts of
Leonardo da Vinci, including the
Codex Atlanticus. There are now some 12,000 drawings by European artists, from the 14th through the 19th centuries, which have come from the collections of a wide range of patrons and artists, academicians, collectors, art dealers, and architects. Prized manuscripts, including the Leonardo codices, were requisitioned by the French during the Napoleonic occupation, and only partly returned after 1815.
Among the manuscripts is the
Muratorian fragment, of ''ca'' 170 A.D., the earliest example of a
Biblical canon.
The Library has a college of Doctors, similar to the scriptors of the Vatican Library. Among prominent figures have been
Giuseppe Ripamonti,
Ludovico Antonio Muratori,
Giuseppe Antonio Sassi, Cardinal
Angelo Mai and, at the beginning of the
20th century,
Antonio Maria Ceriani,
Achille Ratti, the future Pope
Pius XI, and
Giovanni Mercati.
The building was damaged in
World War II, with the loss of the archives of opera libretti of
La Scala, but was restored in 1952 and underwent major restorations in 1990–97.
External links
★
Biblioteca Ambrosiana web-site
★
The Ambrosian Library @ the
Catholic Encyclopedia